"You are with us or you are with the Terrorists!" - that's what Bush says.
What if you were a German person in Germany in 1939 and Hitler said, "You are with us or you are with the Jews!"
Or if in 1943 he said, "You are with us or you are with the Americans!" (He probably had a derogatory term for Americans - the Jews had already been demonized).
Would you have been able to say, "I am with the Jews, then!" or "I am with the Americans." Would you have kept your mouth shut?
We have Bush (and other Republicans) saying, "You are with us or you are with the Terrorists!"
and I say "You are against Bush or you are with the Terrorists!" (and that Bush is a terrorist)
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I am for the so-called "terrorists" - if by "terrorist" they mean innocent people people being held in Guantanamo Bay and people like Tariq Ramadan*** - a scholar (teaches Islamic studies and philosophy at Oxford) who is being kept out of the US because at one time he gave money to to a group that gave humanitarian aid to the Palestinians.
That's often what it seems to come down to. "Are you with 'us' or are you with the Palestinians?" as if people cannot be for both. As if people cannot be Americans and support the cause of the Palestinians. The cause of having a Palestinian state separate from and not controlled by Israel. The cause of having a Palestinian democracy where the people are allowed to choose and elect who they want to represent them.
The underlying question is also - "Are you with us or are you with the Muslims?"
The people making the arguments hem and haw and say that they are not against
all Muslims - just the
Islamist ones (? see Pipes reference in footnote) or just the ones who hate the
west. Meanwhile - Bush (and everyone who is
with him) - is doing everything that he can to make nearly all of the Muslims
against him and us. Invading Iraq, supporting the bombing of Lebanon, abusing authority, abusing innocent Muslims, justifying torturing Muslims, passing laws that justify secret detentions and torture - of Muslims and people who support Muslims.
Some people actually seem to buy this (or some representatives - including Democrats - might think that their constituents buy it) so they are with
Bush instead of for human rights. Bush calls those of us 'naive' who see the obvious connection of the US actions in Iraq inciting a reaction against it. Bush sees the reaction - the resulting "insurgency" as a vindication of his views.
As if since people fight back that he is right to have had the US on the offensive against them.
As if we are supposed to think, "see how bad those people are - we invade their country and destroy their culture - and they don't like it. Those bad, evil, people. Terrorists. You are either with us or you are with them."
Even if we say we are for Habeas Corpus - we are "For the terrorists". That is the essential argument for whatever the Republicans want these days. It's amazing how they get away with it.
The question should be "Are you for or against Human Rights?" or even "Are you for the rich or for the oppressed?" (the rich are taking care of themselves pretty well - I don't think they need my support).
I will not be intimidated against being on the side of oppressed people - even if it is my country that is causing that oppression.
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***How Daniel Pipes "reasoned" this out:
That he has formally resigned from Notre Dame suggests just how solid the DHS evidence against him is. And this, by the way, does not surprise me. A senior DHS official looked me hard in the eyes a few weeks ago and assured me, "The evidence we have is damning."
Ramadan's exclusion marks a signal victory for the effort to keep the enemy out of the United States, for few in the Islamist ranks will deploy the highly respectable and high-powered support that Ramadan has enjoyed. If this man can be kept out, then anyone can be.
That said, it is not a perfect victory, for it depended on Ramadan's connections to terrorism; in the future, I hope that being an Islamist will in of itself – without necessarily having ties to violence – be grounds for keeping aliens out of the United States, much as being a communist was grounds for exclusion in an earlier era. (December 14, 2004)
Sep. 26, 2006 update: ...Cooper would not identify the groups that received the donations that led to the visa denial but the New York Sun reporter who got this quote, Josh Gerstein, narrowed the list to the "Comité de Bienfaisance et Secours aux Palestiniens," based in Paris, and the "Association de Secours Palestinien, based in Basel, Switzerland, both blacklisted by U.S. authorities in August 2003."
http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/385___
What Mr. Ramadan said recently on Democracy Now!
TARIQ RAMADAN: Yes. Look, you know, I have been waiting for two years, and, you know, I heard so many allegations, that I met a terrorist, that I was teaching to terrorists. So at the end it’s good that I have a ledger just clearing me from all these allegations and saying this had not -- you know, it’s not in my record and that my record is clear. The only thing which is now the reason of my denial is that I gave money to a French organization, which is not suspected in France and connected to many, you know, cities in France and connected even with the mayor of Lille.
But much more than that, which is really incredible, is that I gave money to this organization between December ’98 and July 2002, meaning one year before this organization was blacklisted in the States. And I received today a letter telling me, ‘You should reasonably have known that this organization was connected to Hamas,’ so meaning by that I should have known it before the United States administration itself knew it, which is nonsense. It’s just incredible. It’s not a reason. I’m denied because of other reasons, and mainly what I’m saying about the U.S. administration and the current U.S. administration.
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/09/28/1446237&mode=thread&tid=25